The Walloon movement is the lesser-known counterpart to the Flemish movement in Belgium. In contemporary political debate
it presents itself, and is usually perceived, as a civic and voluntaristic movement predicated on the values of democracy,
freedom, openness and anti-nationalism. As such it is contrasted against its Flemish counterpart, which accordingly is characterised
as tending towards an ethnic exclusivist form of nationalism hinging on descent, culture and language. However, the historical
record behind these representations shows that the Walloon movement is rooted in ethno-cultural as much as social politics,
and that it has always contained both civic and ethnic elements to varying degrees. This article highlights the Walloon movement
in order to analyse the language and national stereotypes in which national movements are characterised both in political
rhetoric and in scholarly analysis. The case is particularly relevant for the problematic usage of the ‘civic-ethnic’ opposition,
slipping between the discourses of antagonism and analysis; one type of such slippage is here identified as ‘denied ethnicism’.

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